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Artemis II Lunar Mission Success Fuels Space Tech Boom and Satellite Internet Wars
Published 3 weeks, 4 days ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the space technology industry has been electrified by NASA's Artemis II mission, marking the first crewed lunar flight since 1972, while market buzz centers on high-stakes acquisition talks.[1][5] Launched Wednesday from Kennedy Space Center, the Orion capsule with astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen cleared Earth orbit Thursday evening via a critical trans-lunar injection burn, reaching 24,500 mph on a free-return trajectory around the moon's far side by Monday.[1][2]
This milestone validates NASA's Space Launch System and Orion for deep-space operations, building on uncrewed Artemis I's 1.4 million-mile journey, with crews now testing life-support amid radiation exposure beyond Earth's magnetic field.[3][5] No major regulatory changes or disruptions reported, but human factors like congestion and taste loss in microgravity highlight ongoing challenges.[9]
Market movements surged Thursday as Globalstar (GSAT) shares rose 7% amid reports of Amazon negotiating its $8.8 billion acquisition to bolster Project Kuiper against SpaceX's Starlink; SpaceX has also eyed the firm, with talks complicated by Apple's 20% stake.[2][8] Globalstar stock is up 273% over 12 months, signaling investor heat in satellite comms.[2] The spacecraft avionics market, valued at $4.48 billion in 2025, eyes $9.76 billion by 2035, driven by commercial constellations like Telesat's 156-satellite Lightspeed by 2027.[4]
Leaders respond aggressively: NASA leans on private partners like SpaceX and Blue Origin for future docking rehearsals next year, while Amazon and SpaceX vie for dominance amid downstream market consolidation forecasts.[5][6] Compared to last week's quieter pre-launch prep, this period shows accelerated momentum, with no supply chain hiccups or consumer shifts noted, though satellite internet rivalry intensifies.[2]
(Word count: 298)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This milestone validates NASA's Space Launch System and Orion for deep-space operations, building on uncrewed Artemis I's 1.4 million-mile journey, with crews now testing life-support amid radiation exposure beyond Earth's magnetic field.[3][5] No major regulatory changes or disruptions reported, but human factors like congestion and taste loss in microgravity highlight ongoing challenges.[9]
Market movements surged Thursday as Globalstar (GSAT) shares rose 7% amid reports of Amazon negotiating its $8.8 billion acquisition to bolster Project Kuiper against SpaceX's Starlink; SpaceX has also eyed the firm, with talks complicated by Apple's 20% stake.[2][8] Globalstar stock is up 273% over 12 months, signaling investor heat in satellite comms.[2] The spacecraft avionics market, valued at $4.48 billion in 2025, eyes $9.76 billion by 2035, driven by commercial constellations like Telesat's 156-satellite Lightspeed by 2027.[4]
Leaders respond aggressively: NASA leans on private partners like SpaceX and Blue Origin for future docking rehearsals next year, while Amazon and SpaceX vie for dominance amid downstream market consolidation forecasts.[5][6] Compared to last week's quieter pre-launch prep, this period shows accelerated momentum, with no supply chain hiccups or consumer shifts noted, though satellite internet rivalry intensifies.[2]
(Word count: 298)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI